Elite firmsâ notorious ârevolving doorâ culture isnât arbitrary but a rational way to signal talent and boost profits, a new study finds. Why do the worldâs most prestigious firmsâsuch as McKinsey, Goldman Sachs and other elite consulting giants, investment banks, and law practicesâhire the brightest talents, train them intensively, and then, after a few years, send many of them packing? A recent study in the American Economic Review concludes that so-called adverse selection is not a flaw but rather a sign that the system is working precisely as intended. Two financial economists, from the University of Rochester and the University of WisconsinâMadison respectively, created a model that explains how reputation, information, and retention interact in professions where skill is essential and performance is both visible and attributable to a specific person, particularly in fields such as law, consulting, fund asset management, auditing, and architecture. They argue that much of the professional services world operates through âintermediariesââfirms that both hire employees (also referred to as âagentsâ or âmanagersâ) and market their expertise to clientsâbecause clients canât themselves easily judge a workerâs ability from the outset. âIdentifying skilled professionals is critical yet presents a major challenge for clients,â the researchers write. âSome of the firmâs employees are high-quality managers,â says coauthor Ron Kaniel, the Jay S. and Jeanne P. Benet Professor of Finance at the Universityâs Simon Business School, âbut the firm is paying them less than their actual quality, because initially the employees donât have a credible way of convincing the outside world that they are high-quality.â âChurningâ to boost reputation At the start of an employeeâs career, the firm has an advantage, Kaniel and his coauthor Dmitry Orlov contend, because the firm (âthe mediatorâ) can assess an employeeâs talent more accurately than outside clients can. During what the author...
First seen: 2025-11-21 03:06
Last seen: 2025-11-21 07:07